I have 31 years of
empirical evidence that I married a saint. My wife has now put up with
me ever since we wed on June 28, 1980.
The big day was in
Kristiansand, Norway, in her home church. My family from America (Chicagoland)
was there to witness, as Kirsti and I said, “Ja, I do” in our bilingual
service.
It’s been a happy
marriage. Thankfully, we spent more time preparing for the marriage than
we did for the wedding. We made a commitment before we got married that
we would freely discuss the d-word (divorce), but that after we got married,
we would never mention, not even in jest. We have kept that agreement.
Ben Franklin once said, Before you get married, keep both eyes wide
open. After you get married, keep them both half-closed.
Little would we realize
at the time we got married how rare we would be as a couple, whose marriage
has lasted so long in contemporary America. I even met someone at church
once who told me that she had been married to her husband on the very same
day (June 28, 1980) in Ohio. Only, sad to say, they were divorced after
seven years or so.
What’s happened to marriage?
The New York Times
called America a “post-marital society.” Tragically, that seems to be accurate.
I say tragically because
marriage is good. It’s good for your spiritual health, your mental health,
your physical health, your fiscal health, your sexual life. In short, it’s
good all around.
In fact, a classic
book by Peggy Waite and Maggie Gallagher, The Case for Marriage,
documents all these things. They even show that people who are married
live longer and happier.
So why has marriage
hit such hard times in our society?
“Marriage is a wonderful
institution,” said Mae West famously. “But who wants to live in an institution?”
I read a release from National
Marriage Week USA that in 1970, 79% of adults were married, but only 57%
were married in 2008. 40% of children are now born in America out of wedlock.
In the black community, 72% of children are born without married parents.
Indeed, marriage has fallen on hard times in our day.
I believe that ultimately
marriage is a spiritual picture. When tens of millions of viewers all around
the world saw William and Kate tie the knot at Westminster Abbey in London
several weeks back, they heard some of the Church officials mention the
traditional belief that marriage is a picture of Christ and His bride---the
Church. That’s why marriage is so special.
Perhaps, that’s why marriage
is under attack in America---seemingly from all quarters, such as:
*no fault divorce laws which
make it easy to get divorced, even if only one wants out. Imagine trying
to do business with someone, where the other person can simply opt out
when he/she feels like it;
*people living together
before they get married (if they get married). Surveys have shown that
cohabitation generally better prepares a couple for divorce more than for
a happy marriage;
*the feminist assault. One
of the leaders said (long before she herself got married) that a woman
needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle;
*the gay attempt to redefine
marriage. Just last week, the Republican-led New York legislature voted
in same sex marriage in that state;
*the Marxist attack to do
away with it. Karl Marx says in the Communist Manifesto that he believed
in the “Abolition of the family! Even the most radical flare up at this
infamous proposal of the Communists.”
Many today think marriage
is unnecessary. They think marriage is misery and singleness is bliss.
Monogamy sounds like with monotony. It’s boring, supposedly. Who wants
to be confined to just one spouse?
Modern Western man may condemn
the primitive cultures which practice polygamy. But we have “serial polygamy,”
one wife (or girlfriend) after another.
I think one of the biggest myths of all about marriage is that all
that matter are feelings. But feelings come and go.
I remember a friend from
high school who got married about five years before I did. But the marriage
didn’t last. After about a year of marriage, he and his wife got into a
fight. He said, “Well, do you love me anymore?” She said, “I don’t know.”
He said, “That’s it, I want a divorce.” And they got divorced. They were
slaves to their feelings.
I also believe marriage
should not become your god. One time I was on the road around Valentine’s
Day. I called a florist to request flowers to be sent to my wife, and I
asked for this message to accompany the flowers:
Roses are red,
Violets are blue.
I love you the most,
Except for you know who.
The florist didn’t understand this message and was initially reluctant
to send it. But Kirsti picked up on it right away. (The Lord has come first
in our relationship. That’s why we’re still happily married all these years.)
So happy anniversary,
dear. And thanks for putting up with me for all these years.
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